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Continuation of Membrane Dynamics And Introduction to Membrane Interaction and Transport

Continuation of Membrane Dynamics And Introduction to Membrane Interaction and Transport. Chapter 11 (Page 383-398). Membrane Dynamics. 1 . Fluid Mosaic Model of Membranes. Membrane mosaic is fluid because the noncovalent interactions enable the molecules to freely move laterally .

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Continuation of Membrane Dynamics And Introduction to Membrane Interaction and Transport

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  1. Continuation of Membrane Dynamics And Introduction to Membrane Interaction and Transport Chapter 11 (Page 383-398)

  2. Membrane Dynamics

  3. 1. Fluid Mosaic Model of Membranes Membrane mosaic is fluid because the noncovalent interactions enable the molecules to freely move laterally.

  4. 2. Single Particle Tracking of a Lipid by Fluoresence Movement of a single lipid in 56 ms.

  5. 2. Single Particle Tracking of a Lipid by Fluoresence • The pattern of movement indicates rapid diffusion within confined regions. • There are occasional hops into an adjoining regions which suggest that lipids are corralled by “molecular fences.” • What are these “molecular fences”?

  6. 3. Membrane Protein Motion • FRAP studies show that membrane proteins, membrane lipids, are free to diffuse laterally in the plane of the bilayer and are in constant motion. • Some membrane proteins associate to form large aggregates on the surface of a cell or organelle in which individual protein molecules do not move relative to one another. • Acetylcholine receptors on neuron plasma membrane

  7. 3. Membrane Protein Motion • Acetylcholine receptors on neuron plasma membrane • The receptors consist of five subunits (2βγδ). • Each subunit has four transmembrane  helices (M1 to M4). • M2 is amphiphatic and the others are hydrophobic. The amphiphaticity is important for subunit arrangement.

  8. 3. Membrane Protein Motion • C. Other membrane proteins are anchored to internal structures that prevent their free diffusion. • Glycophorin and chloride-bicarbonate exchanger are tethered to spectrin, a filamentous cytoskeletal protein.

  9. 4. Lipid Distribution within a Single Leaflet is NOT Random • Lipids can exist in microdomains. • Glycosphingolipids (cerebrosides and gangliosides; long-chain saturated fatty acids) form transient clusters in the outer leaflet that exclude glycerophospholipids(one unsaturated fatty acyl group and shorter saturated acyl group). • Sphingolipids also form microdomains with cholesterol (outer leaflet of plasma membrane) due to more stable associations with the long ring system of cholesterol. • - These microdomains are slightly thicker and more ordered than those rich in phospholipids.

  10. 4. Lipid Distribution within a Single Leaflet is NOT Random • Difficult to dissolve with nonionic detergents. • Can be thought of as “liquid-ordered sphingolipid rafts adrift on an ocean of liquid-disordered phospholipids.” Lipid (Membrane) rafts.

  11. 5. Membrane Rafts are Enriched in Two Classes of Integral Membrane Proteins • Membrane proteins covalently anchored to the membrane via long-chain saturated fatty acids. • Palmitoyl group (16:0) • Myristoyl group (14:0) • Doubly or triply acylated with the same group or a mixture of both • GPI-anchored proteins. • These anchors may form more stable associations with cholesterol-sphingolipidmicrodomains than with phospholipids.

  12. 6. Membrane Rafts can alter Membrane Structure • Caveolin is an integral membrane protein that forms a special class of membrane rafts. • Caveolins have two globular domains each connected to the membrane (cytoplasmic leaflet) by a hairpin-shaped hydrophobic domain. • Also attached via 3 palmitoyl groups of the carboxyl-terminal globular domain. • The proteins bind cholesterol in the membrane.

  13. 6. Membrane Rafts can alter Membrane Structure • Caveolin forces the associated lipid bilayer to curve inward, forming caveolae (“little caves”) in the surface of the cell. cholesterol-sphingolipidmicrodomains on outer leaflet

  14. 6. Membrane Rafts are Quite Abundant but Transient • Abundance • The cell surface can be occupied with as much as 50% rafts. • Time-scale • Membrane proteins move in and out of rafts on a time-scale of seconds. • Rafts exist on a µs time scale, which is relevant to membrane-mediated biochemical processes. • Important for biological effect • Concentrated/localized interaction between 2 membrane proteins such as a receptor and a signaling protein.

  15. Membrane Interactions

  16. 1. Integral Proteins Mediate Cell-Cell Interactions and Adhesion • Several families of integral proteins in the plasma membrane provide specific points of attachment via their extracellular domains between cells, or between a cell and extracellular matrix proteins. • Integrins • Cadherins • Immunoglobulin-like proteins • Selectins

  17. 1. Integral Proteins Mediate Cell-Cell Interactions and Adhesion • Integrins • Heterodimeric proteins • Made of  and β subunits • Each subunit is anchored to the plasma membrane by a single hydrophobic transmembrane helix • The extracellular domains combine to form a binding site for divalent ions (Ca2+), extracellular matrix proteins (collagen and fibronectin), or for specific surface proteins of other cells. • Binding site sequence is Arg-Gly-Asp

  18. 1. Integral Proteins Mediate Cell-Cell Interactions and Adhesion • Roles played • Adhesives • Receptors • Signal transducers • Regulation of many processes • Tissue repair • Tissue defense • B. Cadherins • Four extracellular Ca2+ binding domains • Undergo homophilic (“with same kind”) interactions with identical cadherins in an adjacent cell • - Binding occurs at most distal Ca2+ binding domain

  19. 1. Integral Proteins Mediate Cell-Cell Interactions and Adhesion • C. Immunoglobulin-like proteins • Undergo Ca2+ independent interactions • Homophilic interactions • Heterophilic interactions with an integrin • D. Selectins (A type of lectin) • Bind tightly to carbohydrate moieties in neighboring cells in a Ca2+dependent manner • Found in various types of blood cells and endothelial cells lining blood vessels • Participate in blood-clotting

  20. 2. Membrane Fusion • Membranes are very stable but are NOT static. They undergo fusion, which is central to many biological processes. • Fusion occurs between two membranes without loss of membrane continuity. • The process can be spontaneous or protein-mediated via integral proteins called fusion proteins.

  21. 2I. General Steps for Membrane Fusion • Two membranes recognize one another. • The surfaces become closely apposed resulting in loss of water molecules that interact with the polar head groups of lipids. • The bilayer structures become locally disrupted, resulting in fusion of the outer leaflet of each membrane (hemifusion) • The bilayers fuse to form a single continuous layer • For receptor-mediated endocytosis or regulated secretion:: • 5. The fusion process is triggered at the appropriate time or in response to a specific signal.

  22. 2II. Examples of Membrane Fusion

  23. 2III. Nerve Cell Communication • Nerve cells communicate with one another via structures called axons and dendrites. • Axons transmit information(neurotransmitter; presynaptic neuron) using exocytosis. • Dendrites receive information (postsynaptic neuron) via receptors. • The apposition of an axon from one nerve cell and a dendrite from another nerve cell creates a structure called the synapse. http://scienceblogs.com/purepedantry/2007/03/06/neuron-to-glia-synapse-on-axon/

  24. 2III. Neurotransmitter Release aided by Fusion Proteins: Step 1 • The secretory vesicle membrane contains the v-SNARE synaptobrevin (red). • The target (plasma) membrane contains the t-SNAREs syntaxin (blue) and SNAP25 (violet).

  25. 2III. Neurotransmitter Release aided by Fusion Proteins: Step 2 • When a local increase in [Ca2+] signals release of neurotransmitter, the v-SNARE, SNAP25, and t-SNARE interact, forming a coiled bundle of four αhelices.

  26. 2III. Neurotransmitter Release aided by Fusion Proteins: Step 3 and 4 • The bilayers are locally disrupted.

  27. 2III. Neurotransmitter Release aided by Fusion Proteins: Step 5 and 6

  28. Membrane Transport

  29. 1. The Cell is Selectively Permeable • All living cells interact with their surroundings by transporting solutes in and out as needed for biosynthesis and metabolism. The transport process is restricted by the physical and chemical properties of the solutes. • Four main factors govern cell permeability: • Size • Hydrophobicity • Charge • Concentration

  30. 2. General Table for Solute Permeability • * Size limitations for nonpolar molecules can vary but generally: ↑ MW, ↓ Permeability • In drug design, people aim to synthesize cell-permeable compounds that are ≤ 500 g/mol. • LeesonP.D. & Springthorpe, B. The influence of drug-like concepts on decision-making in medicinal chemistry. Nat. Rev. Drug Discov.6: 881–90, 2007.

  31. 3. Two General Routes for Membrane Transport • Passive Transport • Simple diffusion (In direction of chemical gradient) • Applicable to nonpolar molecules and small polar molecules • Diffusion in direction of electrochemical gradient • Applicable to polar molecules and ions • Membrane protein facilitated • Active Transport • Diffusion against the electrochemical gradient • Membrane protein facilitated

  32. 3A. Passive Transport In accordance with the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics, molecules tend to spontaneously assume the distribution of greatest randomness and lowest energy.

  33. 3A. Passive Transport • Simple Diffusion- Net movement of electrically neutral solutes across a plasma membrane toward the side of lower solute concentration until equilibrium is achieved. This is movement in the direction of the chemical gradient.

  34. 3A. Passive Transport • Electrochemical Gradient Directed Diffusion- Net movement of electrically charged solutes is dictated by a combination of the electrical potential (Vm) and the chemical concentration difference across the membrane. • Electrochemical potential reaches zero at equilibrium.

  35. 3B. Passive Transport in Contrast to Active Transport • In passive transport, the transported species always moves down its electrochemical gradient and is not accumulated above the equilibrium concentration. • In active transport, the transported species always moves against its electrochemical gradient and is accumulated above the equilibrium concentration. • Active transport is thermodynamically unfavorable (endergonic ΔG > 0) and takes place only when coupled (directly or indirectly) to an exergonic process such as • Breakdown of ATP • The concomitant flow of some other chemical species down its electrochemical gradient.

  36. 3C. Transport of a Polar or Charged Solute • To pass through a lipid bilayer, a polar or charged solute must: • 1st- Give up its interactions with the water molecules in its hydration shell. • 2nd- Diffuse 3 to 10 nm through a nonpolar solvent in which it is poorly soluble. High Energy Intermediate State

  37. 3C. Transport of a Polar or Charged Solute • There are membrane proteins that facilitate this diffusion called transporters or permeases (enzymes but not in the traditional sense) in the direction of or against the electrochemical gradient. • Provide a polar/charged environment with a lower energy intermediate state. Lower Energy Intermediate State

  38. 3C. Transport of a Polar or Charged Solute

  39. 3C. Transport of a Polar or Charged Solute ΔG╪transport <ΔG╪simple diffusion Because the ΔGbindingfor polar/charged solute binding to transporter is negative as a result of cumulative weak interactions and compensates partly for the positive ΔGdehydration. ΔG’° = 0

  40. 3D. Transporters Classified by Solutes (Substrates) and Directionality The directionality can be with or against the electrochemical gradient and so transporters can facilitate both passive and active transport.

  41. 3E. Active Transport In primary active transport, the energy released by ATP hydrolysis (for example) drives solute movement against an electrochemical gradient, which is an endergonic process.

  42. 3E. Active Transport In secondary active transport, a gradient of ion X has been established by primary active transport. Movement of X down its electrochemical gradient now provides the energy to drive cotransport of a second solute (S) against its electrochemical gradient.

  43. 3F. Free-energy Change for transport (ΔGt) The amount of energy needed for the transport of a solute against a gradient can be calculated from the initial concentration gradient. The general equation for the free-energy change in the chemical process that converts S to P is ΔG = ΔG’° + RT ln [P]/[S] where R = 8.315 J/mol· K and T is in K. Because S is not actually converted into a product P, ΔG’° = 0; ΔGt= RT lnC2/C1 C1 is the concentration from starting region C2 is the concentration at the final region.

  44. 3F. Free-energy Change for transport (ΔGt) ΔG’° = 0; ΔGt= RT lnC2/C1 If C1 = C2/10, ΔGt= RT ln(10 x C1)/C1 ΔGt= 5.7 kJ/mol ΔGtis positive; Flow against electrochemical gradient ΔGtis negative; Flow down electrochemical gradient

  45. 3F. Free-energy Change for transport (ΔGt) If solute is an ion, Where = Charge x Faraday Constant x Transmembrane electrical potential (in Volts) Faraday constant: 96,480 J/V· mol Eukaryotic cells have electrical potentials across their plasma membranes of about 0.05 to 0.1 V (with the inside negative relative to the outside)

  46. 3G. General Classification of Transporters • Carriers • Substrates with high stereospecificity • Catalyze transport at rates below free diffusion limits • Saturable like enzymes • Channels • Not high stereospecificity • Catalyze transfers at rates several orders of magnitude greater than carriers, approaching diffusion limits • Not saturable

  47. 4. Types of Transports

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